"gun seizure"
3 episodes tagged with this keyword
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Mark Koernke discussed preparedness equipment and firearms on Weapons Wednesday, reviewing tactical gear deals from airrattle.com and airsoftgi.com including BDU shirts, gloves, and camo jumpsuits. He critiqued Hillary Clinton's handling of classified documents and Washington State's Initiative 1491 gun seizure measure. The bulk of the episode focused on AR-15 rifle design, history, and optimization, including discussion of the AR-18, Eugene Stoner's rifle designs, M16 variants, handguard systems, and free-floating barrel technology. Koernke covered historical police weapons like barbed billy clubs and compared modern competition rifle designs to historical German rifles like the Gewehr 88 and 1917 Enfield. Callers contributed technical questions about handguard systems and custom 1911 pistols.
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Mark Koernke discussed the Connecticut gun confiscation law and called for a coordinated information campaign to alert Connecticut residents that they are not alone in resisting gun seizure. He analyzed ammunition purchasing trends over the past year, arguing that Americans have accumulated billions of rounds in a decentralized manner that gives them tactical advantage over centralized government stockpiles. Koernke criticized the NRA for defeatist messaging, condemned law enforcement cooperation with gun confiscation, and drew parallels to regional government schemes and communist infiltration from urban centers into rural areas. He urged listeners to mail DVDs, CDs, and patriotic materials to Connecticut neighborhoods using varied content to encourage grassroots information sharing.
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Mark Koernke discussed aerial reconnaissance photographs of Camp Gruber in Oklahoma, which he claims document federal preparation for the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. He offered to mail copies of the images for a small fee and postage. The show covered a Wisconsin case involving federal seizure of 349 firearms and $20,000 from a private collector, which Koernke characterized as theft and compared to Nazi Germany tactics. He criticized the Gun Control Act of 1968, noting that actors including Charlton Heston had promoted it on television before Heston later became NRA president. Koernke announced upcoming militia training exercises, a hamfest in Dayton Ohio, and discussed plans for patriot-oriented film and television productions. Caller Dave from New York discussed resistance movements, community security, and recommended James Wesley Rawls' survival book 'Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse.'